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Once again, Israeli Defense (Offense) Minister Shaul Mofaz has rattled
his saber at Iran. Mofaz and the Israelis are upset because the United States
has yet to shock and awe Iran and really the Jabotinskyites, well accustomed
to invading and provoking their Arab neighbors, have no patience for the Security
Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency, currently meeting in Vienna—they
want Iran decimated now, no more excuses. “The Israeli approach
is that the U.S. and the European countries should lead the issue of the Iranian
nuclear programme to the table of the U.N. Security Council, asking for sanctions.
And I hope the sanctions will be effective,” Mofaz is quoted by Reuters.
In other words, sanctions will not be good enough for Mofaz and the Israelis—nothing
short of mass murder will suffice.
As usual, the proposed sanctions against Iran are “aimed at the regime
and its nuclear and missile programmes, not the Iranian people,” as Nicholas
Burns, under-secretary of state, explained, according to the Financial Times.
In much the same way, we are told, the United States and the United Nations
imposed sanctions against Iraq and the result was Saddam lived in palaces, sold
oil under the table, and 1.5 million Iraqis, 500,000 of them infants and children,
died in the process, an outcome well worth the effort, according to Madeline
Albright. Infants and children invariably pay for sanctions imposed against
governments and Nicholas Burns knows it. Of course, as with the sanctions imposed
against Iraq, Iran’s oil will not be taken off the market because this
would be “unthinkable at a time of high energy prices,” or windfall
profits for multinational oil corporations.
Naturally, sanctions come first, and then military action. “Military
action against Iran is neither inevitable, nor, at this stage, likely,”
a USA
Today op-ed would have us believe. “But if the Iraq war provides one
lesson, it is this: The best way to address a foreign threat—and Iran’s
illegal effort to build nuclear weapons is certainly that—is through coordinated
international action, difficult as that is to achieve.” Of course it is
likely, not that we should expect the scriveners at Gannett Co. Inc. to do five
minutes of research on the Straussian neocons, who keep telling us they will
take out Iran and all the other “rogue nations” on the “evil
empire” roster. Recall their surprise when Bush ordered the invasion of
Iraq—and also later their lame attempts to deflect blame for acting as
propaganda organs. Same thing this time around, although most Americans have
the memory capacity of an earth worm after a late spring frost.
Like actors following a well-drafted script—drafted some time ago by
the Straussian neocons and their Jabotinsky co-conspirators—Shaul Mofaz
has issued his warning Israel will act on its own (an empty threat, since only
the United States has the capacity to inflict significant harm on Iran, unless
Israel plans to nuke Iran), and Donald Rumsfeld accused Iran of dispatching
elements of its Revolutionary Guard to stir trouble inside Iraq, as usual uncorroborated,
while John Bolton told everybody there is a “a sense of urgency about
Tehran’s defiance of the world community,” as the BBC
put it.
Indeed, Iran is back on the front burner again after a short hiatus. Soon the
Security Council will determine Iran’s illusory nukes are real and threatening,
sanctions will be forthcoming, but these of course will not be good enough for
the Straussian neocons, a cabal of criminals that fully intend to shock and
awe the country, kill thousands, and seriously disrupt Iranian society and culture.
Iran has threatened a world of hurt—and it has the ability to do it by
sinking a couple oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, the most strategically
important sea route in the world. Doing so will stop dead oil deliveries from
Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, as well as most of United Arab Emirates.
Add to this Venezuela leader Hugo Chavez’ warning that he will shut down
oil imports to the United States if Bush goes “over the line” and
attempts to overthrow his government, as the CIA failed to do in 2002.
As it now stands, we are but a few weeks away from total disaster—that
is unless the devious plans of the Straussian neocons can be derailed and sanity
returns to the White House and the Pentagon. I’m not counting on it, however,
for it now appears the Security Council will do a repeat of late 2002 and early
2003. In fact, this time around, it appears at least three of the five permanent
members—the United States, Britain, and France—are chomping at the
bit to invade Iran. Last time around, France opposed the invasion of Iraq—and
endured scorching criticism from the United States and millions of brainwashed
Americans—but on this round France believes Iran’s nuclear program
(Iran ratified the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty in 1970, and since February
1992 has allowed the IAEA to inspect its nuclear facilities) is “a cover
for clandestine military activity,” as Foreign Minister Philippe
Douste-Blazy declared last month. In other words, it will be smooth sailing
for the Straussian neocons this time around.
Brace yourself for six dollar a gallon gasoline and “harm and pain,”
as promised by Iran. “Teheran’s most overt menaces to date were
repeated several times at the meeting of the governing board of the International
Atomic Energy Agency,” the UK
Telegraph reports this evening. “Iranian officials declined to spell
out precisely what Iran would do…. But experts say Iran’s options
include driving up oil prices, blocking the passage of tankers through the Gulf,
stirring more chaos in Iraq, fomenting violence against Israel or promoting
terrorist attacks against the West,” all perfectly normal responses for
a nation after it is invaded by a far superior military force determined to
bounce the rubble and kill hundreds of thousands of people.
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